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Schmidt is a character in Principles of Scientific Management by Frederick Winslow Taylor. His true identity was Henry Noll. In Principles, Taylor described how between 1898–1901 at Bethlehem Steel he had motivated Schmidt to increase his workload from carrying 12 tons of pig iron per day to 47 tons.
Frederick Winslow Taylor makes a great villain, but Stewart needs him to be ridiculous, which makes it difficult to appreciate Brandeis’s argument: there was waste, there were...
Frederick Winslow Taylor (March 20, 1856 – March 21, 1915) was an American mechanical engineer. He was widely known for his methods to improve industrial efficiency. He was one of the first management consultants.
- Louise M. Spooner
The Principles of Scientific Management (1911) is a monograph published by Frederick Winslow Taylor where he laid out his views on principles of scientific management, or industrial era organization and decision theory. Taylor was an American manufacturing manager, mechanical engineer, and then a management consultant in his later years.
- Frederick Winslow Taylor
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- 1911
- 1911
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Although many early management consultants contributed to the development of the system, Philadelphia’s Frederick Winslow Taylor (1856-1915) is acknowledged as the “Father of Scientific Management”; in fact, the system is also known as “Taylorism.”
National Humanities Center Taylor, The Principles of Scientific Management, 1910, Ch. 2, excerpts 2 succeeds in doing his task right, and within the time limit specified, he receives an addition of from 30 percent to 100 percent to his ordinary wages. These tasks are carefully planned, so that both good and careful work
Schmidt, a "little Pennsylvania Dutchman," was a character in Frederick Winslow Taylor's famous treatise The Principles of Scientific Management. Whether or not Schmidt was anything like the workers that Taylor supposedly observed at the Bethlehem Steel Company is questionable.